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From the Medical Biochemistry Department, University of Graz, and the Second Department of Medicine, University Hospital of Vienna (Austria) (K.K.).
Correspondence to Prof Dr G.M. Kostner, Medical Biochemistry Department, Karl-Franzens-Universität, Harrachgasse 21/III, 8010 Graz, Austria.
Abstract Lp(a) is composed of an LDL-like core and the
glycoprotein apo(a). Current evidence strongly suggests
that the assembly of this atherogenic lipoprotein proceeds outside the
liver cells in a two-step fashion. In the first step, a loose
complex is formed involving kringle-4 motifs in apo(a) and one or more
Lys side chains in apoB-100. In the second step, this complex is
stabilized by a disulfide bridge. Indications are that Lp(a) assembly
is critical in the determination of plasma apo(a) concentrations.
Therefore, we searched for substances that interfere with the first
step of Lp(a) assembly.
-Aminohexoic acid (
-AHA), known as an
inhibitor from earlier assembly studies, had an
IC50 of 4.8 mmol/L. The IC50 of Pro,
HO-p-aminobenzene sulfonamide, Lys,
N-
-acetyl-Lys, taurine, Glu, serotonin,
and benzamidine were all >20 mmol/L.
-Aminobutyric acid,
spermine, and spermidine exhibited IC50 on the same
order of magnitude as
-AHA. The substances with the highest
inhibitory action were tranexamic acid and
-aminovaleric acid. Seven of eight patients treated in a pilot
study with tranexamic acid (Cyclocapron) responded with a decrease of
plasma apo(a) of 18.5±8.2%. We suggest that substances that interfere
with the Lp(a) assembly are worth pursuing further for their usefulness
as therapeutic agents in reducing high plasma Lp(a) concentrations.
Key Words: tranexamic acid fibrinolysis drug treatment atherosclerosis recombinant apo(a)
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